B. Wearily, we flopped down on our bedrolls, satisfied that we'd done a good day's work.
C. The horrid brute shot stabbing flames from his blackened fingertips.
D. Our mother was dazed and overwhelmed that we'd surprised her for her birthday.
Answer:
"Full worthy was he in his liege-lord's war,
And therein had he ridden (none more far)
As well in Christendom as heathenesse,
And honoured everywhere for worthiness.
At Alexandria, he, when it was won;"
Explanation:
The narrator describes the gathering individuals as indicated by their social positions. The pilgrims speak to a various cross-area of fourteenth-century English society.
The line from Chaucer's 'General Prologue' references the feudal social structure of medieval England by describing a knight embodying the period's virtues. This representation mirrors the high standing of knights in the feudal hierarchy.
The line from Chaucer's 'General Prologue' to The Canterbury Tales referencing the feudal social structure of medieval England is: 'A knight there was, and that a worthy man, That from the time that he first began, To riden out, he loved chivalry, Truth and honour, freedom and courtesy.'
This line describes a knight who embodies the virtues of the period: chivalry, truth, honor, freedom, and courtesy. In the feudal system, the knight is a warrior aristocrat who serves his lord (often a more powerful nobleman or the king) as a vassal. He is expected to behave with these virtues and this sophisticated depiction suggests the upper echelons of the feudal hierarchy.
#SPJ6
B. Cordially yours.
C. Cordially yours
D. Cordially, yours,
regular
irregular
b. tones
c. words
d. syllables
Justin
Killian
hockey
love
the noun HOCKEY is the direct object